Looking at some of the predictions above in this thread - before the vote results (like predicting massive wins for IN??) - I have to laugh. Markets have rallied back though after the initial panic of the first two days. Probably a bit of scaremongering by vested interests before the vote, now people realizing the sky isn't falling.

predictions - here we go. Technically this is where things get interesting, as we have divergences all over the place. Only the FTSE has actually recovered almost fully. They are back to pre-vote levels, but that is almost to be expected, because the bulk of UK companies earn money offshore - and they have just received a 10% shot in the arm thanks to a GBP devaluation. Also, the FTSE is resource heavy, so a lot of speculation in there. Now, in terms of divergence, Chinese markets are staging some sort of comeback, and hardly registered a blip after the announcement. The question is, now, with all the uncertainty, do we have the cajones to push through and make new highs? With calls for the BoE's Mark Carney's head, and the complete political uncertainty in Britain right now, nothing is on the table, in my opinion. Everything is super risky, and the global market's capacity for absorbing risk is a bit stretched right now. The play is still to the downside, IMO. I am out 100% on all my CFD positions

Yep - the worlds 5th largest economy has just fuxhauled the worlds 3rd largest economy (Japan), by creating a capital inflow to safe haven assets - strengthening their currency which is exactly what Japan didn't want. So now it is back to the drugs - eish. The problem though, is that for the EU, the drugs didn't work - and for Japan, the drugs haven't worked for years, so will the markets believe they will work now? I would expect fresh rounds of QE money to exit England and Japan - flow to the US where you are still getting positive return on your yields (vs negative yields in Japan - and borderline negative yields in England). So back to dollar strengthening, or at least that is how I am calling it.